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CIVE BLOOD!
4-Day Under
Drive
Way
SC WINS MODEL UN MAJOR AWARD
Trojan blood donors will begin lining up today at 8:3G j a.m. in the Commons basement to kick off the four-day Red Cross Blood drive.
A last minute call for 200 more student signups has been issued by Drive Chairman Sally McGrath.
“We need that many more signups before we can even hope to reach our goal of 900 pints,” Miss McGrath said. “This would *be a disastrous time for any type of apathy to hit the campus,” she continued.
Only 861 Trojans have answered so far to the call for blood. Miss McGrath said. Six sororities and 19 fraternities have not yet turned in their group slips containing probable donors. Signups will continue during donation time today and tomorrow from 8:30 to 12:30 and Thursday and Friday from 10:30 to 2:30.
Representative Asks for More Donations
Mrs. Rita Holman, Red Cross field representative for school and college activities, also asked more students to sign up for donating.
“Stanford’s spring drive ended recently with a record 4400 pints collected,” Mrs. Holman said. “SC should be able to give at least a fourth of that!”
For students who are going to donate today through Friday, Mrs. Holman recommended that they eat their meals regularly and be on time for their appointments at 12:30 and 2:30 must be prompt since the basement doors will be closed after those times,” she said. She also stressed the fact that minors must have their signed release slips with them. All release forms must be signed by a witness before they will be accepted, she said.
Entire Process Takes Only Half-Hour
‘I’m sure that the students realize the necessity of
whole blood for wounded Americans in Korea,” Mrs. Holman
said. “Those of us in the states can do our part by contributing blood.”
Students who have not signed up for donations may drop in at the hours specified each day, she said. Only a half-hour is required for the entire process of the preliminary examination, and the blood donating.
Coffee and cookies will be served.
Delta Tau Delta is the leading contender for the trophy awarded the men’s living group for the highest number of pledges. Not far behind are fraternities Theta Kappa Epsilon, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Acacia.
Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority is leading Pi Beta Phi, Delta Delta Delta, and Kappa Kappa Gamma in the competition for the trophy awarded to the women’s living group.
AFROTC is ahead of other contenders for the trophy awarded to the service organization. Acacia, Pi Beta Phi, and the AFROTC won the trophies last semester.
All donors will receive credit cards that will entitle them and their families to free blood transfusions anywhere in the Mnited States.
a i
Vol. XLIV ■'
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Apr. 21, 1953
No. 115
ord Reveals Plans As New IFC President
Art Ford, newly-elected IFC president, yes terday promised that his first meeting as president Thursday will be an active one. He is plannig to set up three of projects within the council, committees to launch a program
The first order of business will be to set a committee to investigate the possibility of additional lighting along University avenue between Jefferson boulevard and 28th street.
“The 3-block-w a 1 k between school and the Row is very dark at night, and it should be lighted better, especially for the women
who have to walk back to the Row after night classes,” Ford said.
Paved Alley
He is also planning to form a committee to see about paving the alley between the Chi Omega house to Alpha Omicron Pi house. He hopes to get a petition drawn up and signed by the owners on both sides of the alley, which includes private residences facing
on 30th street, one block soutn.
Ford will set up the third committee to hear disciplinary cases involving entire fraternities.
“The IFC should handle all oases where houses have violated some IFC or university rule,’ he said.
Ford will also suggest that ail houses appoint a member to take a first-aid course and receive training in civil defense.
A Dry Run
IFC Coordinator Ken Shanks, who scheduled a Repatriation day last Friday to effect the return of many stolen articles on the Row, yesterday called the project
“a dry run.”
"The only thing returned to me were some skins from the Beta Theta Pi house,” he said.
He had been hoping for the re-tumturn of many things, including a couple of front doors, an elephant's foot, a deer’s head, and several house charters.
Thursday’s IFC meeting will be 4 p.m. at the Theta Chi house.
Trophy Given For Timeliness Of Resolutions
General Assembly Passes Three SC Motions at Meet
Such forceful and timely resolutions as the one advocating international weapons-control less than 24-hours after President Eisenhower’s challenge to Russia to disarm wor for SC's delegation the trophy as the best representative of a major power in the Model UN. #
SC was awarded the highest honor for representing the United States most actively and accurately in its foreign policy at the final banquet of the third annual Model UN, Saturday night in Fernwald hall on the Berkeley campus.
The delegation, headed by Mo-hinder Bedi, had three resolutions passed by the General Assembly, the most of any university. Murray Bring introduced the resolution to establish a commission for political and economic advancement of non-self governing territories and to submit the questionn of racial segregation in the Union of South Africa to the UN Court of Justice for an-advisory opinion.
World Disarmament Bill Van Alstyne called for world disarmament through the UN in his resolution, which was cosponsored by Russia in the Political and Security committee.
The Russian delegation, represented by California, atteirmted to push through a resolution which would have all technical guidance of UN disarmament in U.S. hands. The resolution was proposed by Russia in order to make it look as though the U.S. were domineering the disarmament program. The ulterior motive was recognized by the SC delegation and was defeated by the Western nations under U.S. leadership.
Surprise Issue The surprise issue, which was introduced Fridaj’, turned out to be a war between Sudan and Egypt. “The Security Council session was interrupted by a messenger about 4:30 Friday afternoon,” recalled Bring," and the
telegram which he carried announced by Great Britain the Egyptians’ invasion of Sudan.” The council adjourned until 7 p.m. when the discussion on the strategic question began. Bedi, as head of the U.S. group, pushed through a cease fire resolution to halt the African outbreak until further investigation could be made.
Dick Merritt, Jim Smith, and Jim Ivanoff played key parts in achieving SC’s successful representation of the ti.S. The students praised Prof. Eugene Harley, professor of political science, for his advisory and organizational aid.
Next year’s fourth* annual Model UN will be held at UCLA.
Prexy Race Shaken Up
DEVIL AND DANIEL SCREENS TONIGHT
“The Devil and Daniel Webster," an early American film classic, will be presented in 133 FH tonight at 8:30.
The film, a presentation of the spring Film Classics series, originally was released under the title “All That Money Can Buy.” It is based on a short story by Stephen Vincent Benet.
In the movie Walter Huston was cast as a devil in one of his most famous roles, while Daniel Webster was portrayed by Edward Arnold. Simone Simone appeared as the femme fatale, and James Craig played the part of a farmer.
The plot is centered around a
farmer who sells his soul to the devil in return for seven years of prosperity. At the end of seven years the farmer has become a very powerful and wealthy man, but at the same time he has become feared and disliked by all his old friends and even his wife.
When he refuses to give up his soul at the time agreett upon, he gets Daniel Webster to plead his case, while the devil assembles a rogues gallery of all time for a jury.
So elegant and powerful is Daniel Webster’s plea, however, that the devil loses the case, and the farmer retains his soul. *
Prom Bids Available To Senior Class Only
Senior week ticket holders may pick up their free bids to the senior prom at the ticket office starting today, and seniors without tickets may purchase bids for $3, according to Don Luizzi, publicity chairman.
Only a limited number of tickets are available for the May 16 semi-formal dance, Luizzi said. “Pick them up as soon as possible so we can get bids on sale to the rest of the student body.”
Tickets to lower classmen will not go on sale until May 1.
Music by Martin
The prom, sponsored by the junior class, will be held at the Riviera Country club. Music will be provided by Freddy Martin and his orchestra.
The queen and two attendants will be crowned at the prom, according to Larry Spector, senior class president. They will receive cups as prizes for their houses and personal favors for themselves.
Applications for queen are be-
ing distributed today to the sororities and women’s dormitories. Each group may choose one senior as their candidate. Applications, accompanied by an 8% by 11-inch glossy print photograph, must be turned in by 4 p.m. May 1 to 215 SU.
Three Eliminations
Candidates will be asked questions regarding their extra-curri-cular activities and their plans for the future at each of three elimination judgings.
The first elimination will be held at the Phi Kappa Psi house, May 4 at 6 p.m. Contestants will be required to wear suits. At the second judging on May 7 at the Delta Tau Delta house, date dresses will be worn. Formals will be worn at the final elimination at the Zeta Beta Tau house, 6 p.m. May 13.
Final judging will be made by male members of the Senior council, faculty, administration, and officers of the armed forces.
Chairman of the Senior Prom committee is Danny' McDonald.
Final Balloting For YW Posts Slated Today
Final balloting of the YWCA elections will be held today from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Y, according to Vice-President Nancy Mispagel.
Candidates are Carla-Lee Conti and Ann Fant, president; Pat Crawford, vice-president; Carole Browne and Flo Ingram, secretary; and Mary Elizabeth Booth and Celia Cole, treasurer.
Miss Conti, a junior, has suggested that the YWCA be a center for both commuters and people living on campus, and be a place where students of all backgrounds could meet.
A fine arts major, Miss Conti has served the “Y” as publicity chairman this year. She is AWS cabinet activity coordinator, a member of Chimes, and a member of the Junior Class council.
Miss Fant, also a junior, has suggested expanding the “Y” leadership training program by holding discussion groups on student government, setting up personality development groups, creating a feeling of cabinet unity, extending the “Y” resident council for better publicity, and holding foreign student discussion groups.
Projects chairman of the “Y,” Miss Fant is “Y” Senate proxy, secretary of the junior clas^, member of the LAS council, and Chimes.
Four Seek Assembly
Candidates Top Office; Today
SIERRA HIKE
Club to Climb Trojan Peak
Plans for the first group-climb-ing of Trojan Peak by the Trojan Sierra club will be made at a luncheon Friday at noon in room D of Commons.
President Ralph Drummond is
calling the meeting to set a date for the trip and to enlist new members for the hike.
Preparations for the trip are being made early to avoid a cancellation due to any weather changes, Drummond said. A late start and cold weather forced the
Photographer
To Give Talk
Paul Wolfe, official photographer of the city of Burbank, will relate his experiences in seven years of photographing for t n e city of Burbank to the School of Journalism news photography class and other interested persons in 420 SU at 1:15 this afternoon.
Experiences of photographing persons involved in crime, suicide,
murders, fires, and other assignments as official photographer will
be discussed by Wolfe.
__f_________:_____________
SC’s political pot bubbles merrily today as four presidential candidates eye each other and hopefully look for a
place on the front burner.
ThereUl be additional fuel added to campaign fires today at noon in Bovard. Nominations for officers other than
those of ASSC president, vice-president, and secretary — which were handled yesterday — will be accepted.
Whistling up steam for the presidential race after yesterday’s campaign assembly are Jerry Carr, Warpen Clendenning, Arne Lindgren. and George Root.
Radmilla Gogo and Virginia Witmer were joined in the contest for vice-president by Mimi Shepherd. who was nominated from the floor.
Secretary Candidates Nancy Mispagel and Joanne Peterson will run for the secretaryship.
Root, member of Theta Xi fraternity and distance runner on the track squad, was nominated in a surprise move by the all-U party. S e n a t o r-a t-1 a r g e Bill Sweet, who was to have carried the all-U banner, dropped out because of a heavy scholastic schedule next fall.
Clendenning, a Kappa Sig, is presently junior class president.
Lindgren, a Sigma Chi, and sen-ator-at-large, is running under the Trojans for Representative Government label. Carr-is a Tau Kappa Epsilon and chairman of the Board of Publications. He was not present at the assembly.
Clendenning gave three necessary qualifications for president in his acceptance speech.
Qualifications Listed “A president should represent you, should have the knowledge to run the university in the best manner possible, and should be able to build an espirit de corps in the student body,” he said.
Lindgren summed up these qualifications for president:
“The objectives to put foremost are service and promotion of teamwork among the students.”
Root compared school office
JIM LUCOSTIC . . . elections head
with athletics in his acceptai a speech.
“One should approach the jci with a wholesome attitude and r sincere desire to serve,” he said.
Meanwhile, election worker under Commissioner Jim Lucos-tic have already begun preparations for the voting, which w*ill run Apr. 29, 30. and May 1. George Gonzales, chairman of the Elections Investigating committee, said that the election forms for candidates will be available tomorrow in the AMS office, 212
SU.
Finance Reports Due
Each candidate must submit an election financial report, and the forms, along with a list of campaign rules, will be put out tomorrow by the committee, according to Gonzales.
The committee will handle complaints and oversee the election and pre-election campaigning. The committee members are Ron Bartholomew, Joan Field. Shirley Merriam. Pat Wykoff, Jim McGregor, and Gonzales
Boom Ticket Sales for Errol Flynn Film
CHARGE! cry members of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, planning publicity for movie "Charge of the Light Brigade," which will be shown tomorrow at 3:15
tk
and 7:15 p.m. in 133 FH. Three ADS members that have helped publisize the event are, from left to right, Chairman Andy Anderson, Marvin Gottlieb, and Al Dieda.
The uniform worn by Errol Flynn in “Charge of the Light Brigade” is now being used in a promotion stunt by Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertisting fraternity.
Ticket Promotion
In an effort to boost ticket sales of “The Charge of the Light Brigade” to be shown in F o u n d ers hall tomorrow,
President A1 Dieda is parading around the Student Union in Flynn’s cavalry garb. Further stimulation of ticket sales is provided by phonograph music at the ticket booth in front of the Student Union.
Sales Boom
Sales really are booming, according to Bernie Grossman, ADS member who sold 50 tickets in two hours yesterday at the SC booth.
The film will be shown at 3:15 and 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in 133 FH. The 50-cent admission tickets can «be purchased at the Student Union booth between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. today and tomorrow.
members to abandon their trip last year.
Trojan Peak, a 13,968 ft. crag in the High Sierras, is just north of Mt. Whitney and Lake Helen of Troy.
Drummond, Chester Versteeg, and Noble Trenham made the dedication climb, and have scaled the mountain the last two summers. The crag was officially named last year.
The portfolio, which contains pictures of the peak and information on its dimensions, will be exhibited at the meeting Friday.
The information is on file in Do-heny Memorial library.
Drummond requests all those wishing reservations for the
Red Registration Act May Prove Effective, Says Christol
Ext. 441.
Official
Notice
All students attending school under I-S and II-S student deferments should report to the registrar’s office, Owens hall (Robert DeVries), immediately, to fill out SS Form 109, which must be submitted to their local draft boards at the end of the current semester, June, 1953.
Albert F. Zeoh Counselor of Men + + * .
Students who expect to complete requirements for the bachelor’s degree in June of 1953 should check the list that is posted in the corridor outside the Registrar’s office in Owens hall.
Howard W. Patmore Registrar
by Bob Krauch
The beginnings of a fair and effective method for “smoking out the Communists” may be in the offing—but, testing its constitutionality could take as Jong as 12 to 15 more months.
This point was brought out by Dr. Carl Q. Christol, associate professor of political science, in an interview yesterday. He is an expert in constitutional law.
He discussed the ramifications of yesterday’s order by the Subversives Activities Control board requiring all members of the Com-luncheon to call PRospect 2311, j munist party to register with the
attorney general.
Penalty for failure to register is a $10,000 fine or five years imprisonment, or both.
“The order of the Subversives | Activities board most likely will be deemed constitutional,” said Dr. Christol, “but a test case, involving months of hearings, probably will develop.” *
Seeks Enslavement The board branded the Communist party as “a subsidiary and puppet of the Soviet Union” seeking enslavement of Americans.
They further stated the party is “using the cloak of the United States Constitution . . . and, strives for the 'establishment of a dictatorship of the Proletariat in the United States, a goal which would rob the American people of the. freedoms they have forged.”
“There are two methods in which this Communist registration order might be tested,” Dr. Christol said.
“Assuming the person asked to register i$ a proven Communist,
1
CARL CHRISTOL
. . . cites legal procedure
and he refuses to register,” Dr. Christol said, “he then has a right to appeal his case from the board’s decision to the U. S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D. C., within 60 days.
“A second possibility is for the person to be arrested,” Dr. Christol said. “In this case he could seek a writ of habeas corpus on one of two grounds:
“1—He may challenge the order’s constitutionality.
“2—He may admit the order is legal, but claim he is being held without proper cause, denying he is a Communist.
“His case would then be taken to the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals,” Dr. Christol said.
“In either situation, if the or-
der for Communists to register is upheld,” Dr. Christol said, "the case can then be appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court.”
If the Supreme Court refuses the case, it will die and the lesser court’s decision will remain.
“If the Supreme Court accepts the case,” he said, “the final decision of this highest court could take many months.”
How Fought In explaining how it would be fought, Dr. Christol said:
“The Communists probably would fight the case relying heavily on sections in the First and Fifth amendments of the Constitution—Freedom of speech and expression, and the claim that the order deprives them of due process of law in unreasonably taking life, liberty, and property.
"The Federal government would base its case on the Constitutional powers found in Article 1— providing for the common defense and a broad interpretation of the war power.
“The final results of such a test case,” Dr. Christol says, “will be in favor of the government because of its need for strong internal security.”
The Subversives Activities Control Act of 1950, under which the board was created, also provides that the party submit annual financial statements to the attorney general.
Party members 'are forbidden to seek employment in the government. They cannot work in defense plants. They must identify all material sent through the mails and any radio or television broadcast the party sponsors.

CIVE BLOOD!
4-Day Under
Drive
Way
SC WINS MODEL UN MAJOR AWARD
Trojan blood donors will begin lining up today at 8:3G j a.m. in the Commons basement to kick off the four-day Red Cross Blood drive.
A last minute call for 200 more student signups has been issued by Drive Chairman Sally McGrath.
“We need that many more signups before we can even hope to reach our goal of 900 pints,” Miss McGrath said. “This would *be a disastrous time for any type of apathy to hit the campus,” she continued.
Only 861 Trojans have answered so far to the call for blood. Miss McGrath said. Six sororities and 19 fraternities have not yet turned in their group slips containing probable donors. Signups will continue during donation time today and tomorrow from 8:30 to 12:30 and Thursday and Friday from 10:30 to 2:30.
Representative Asks for More Donations
Mrs. Rita Holman, Red Cross field representative for school and college activities, also asked more students to sign up for donating.
“Stanford’s spring drive ended recently with a record 4400 pints collected,” Mrs. Holman said. “SC should be able to give at least a fourth of that!”
For students who are going to donate today through Friday, Mrs. Holman recommended that they eat their meals regularly and be on time for their appointments at 12:30 and 2:30 must be prompt since the basement doors will be closed after those times,” she said. She also stressed the fact that minors must have their signed release slips with them. All release forms must be signed by a witness before they will be accepted, she said.
Entire Process Takes Only Half-Hour
‘I’m sure that the students realize the necessity of
whole blood for wounded Americans in Korea,” Mrs. Holman
said. “Those of us in the states can do our part by contributing blood.”
Students who have not signed up for donations may drop in at the hours specified each day, she said. Only a half-hour is required for the entire process of the preliminary examination, and the blood donating.
Coffee and cookies will be served.
Delta Tau Delta is the leading contender for the trophy awarded the men’s living group for the highest number of pledges. Not far behind are fraternities Theta Kappa Epsilon, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Acacia.
Alpha Epsilon Phi sorority is leading Pi Beta Phi, Delta Delta Delta, and Kappa Kappa Gamma in the competition for the trophy awarded to the women’s living group.
AFROTC is ahead of other contenders for the trophy awarded to the service organization. Acacia, Pi Beta Phi, and the AFROTC won the trophies last semester.
All donors will receive credit cards that will entitle them and their families to free blood transfusions anywhere in the Mnited States.
a i
Vol. XLIV ■'
Los Angeles, Calif., Tuesday, Apr. 21, 1953
No. 115
ord Reveals Plans As New IFC President
Art Ford, newly-elected IFC president, yes terday promised that his first meeting as president Thursday will be an active one. He is plannig to set up three of projects within the council, committees to launch a program
The first order of business will be to set a committee to investigate the possibility of additional lighting along University avenue between Jefferson boulevard and 28th street.
“The 3-block-w a 1 k between school and the Row is very dark at night, and it should be lighted better, especially for the women
who have to walk back to the Row after night classes,” Ford said.
Paved Alley
He is also planning to form a committee to see about paving the alley between the Chi Omega house to Alpha Omicron Pi house. He hopes to get a petition drawn up and signed by the owners on both sides of the alley, which includes private residences facing
on 30th street, one block soutn.
Ford will set up the third committee to hear disciplinary cases involving entire fraternities.
“The IFC should handle all oases where houses have violated some IFC or university rule,’ he said.
Ford will also suggest that ail houses appoint a member to take a first-aid course and receive training in civil defense.
A Dry Run
IFC Coordinator Ken Shanks, who scheduled a Repatriation day last Friday to effect the return of many stolen articles on the Row, yesterday called the project
“a dry run.”
"The only thing returned to me were some skins from the Beta Theta Pi house,” he said.
He had been hoping for the re-tumturn of many things, including a couple of front doors, an elephant's foot, a deer’s head, and several house charters.
Thursday’s IFC meeting will be 4 p.m. at the Theta Chi house.
Trophy Given For Timeliness Of Resolutions
General Assembly Passes Three SC Motions at Meet
Such forceful and timely resolutions as the one advocating international weapons-control less than 24-hours after President Eisenhower’s challenge to Russia to disarm wor for SC's delegation the trophy as the best representative of a major power in the Model UN. #
SC was awarded the highest honor for representing the United States most actively and accurately in its foreign policy at the final banquet of the third annual Model UN, Saturday night in Fernwald hall on the Berkeley campus.
The delegation, headed by Mo-hinder Bedi, had three resolutions passed by the General Assembly, the most of any university. Murray Bring introduced the resolution to establish a commission for political and economic advancement of non-self governing territories and to submit the questionn of racial segregation in the Union of South Africa to the UN Court of Justice for an-advisory opinion.
World Disarmament Bill Van Alstyne called for world disarmament through the UN in his resolution, which was cosponsored by Russia in the Political and Security committee.
The Russian delegation, represented by California, atteirmted to push through a resolution which would have all technical guidance of UN disarmament in U.S. hands. The resolution was proposed by Russia in order to make it look as though the U.S. were domineering the disarmament program. The ulterior motive was recognized by the SC delegation and was defeated by the Western nations under U.S. leadership.
Surprise Issue The surprise issue, which was introduced Fridaj’, turned out to be a war between Sudan and Egypt. “The Security Council session was interrupted by a messenger about 4:30 Friday afternoon,” recalled Bring," and the
telegram which he carried announced by Great Britain the Egyptians’ invasion of Sudan.” The council adjourned until 7 p.m. when the discussion on the strategic question began. Bedi, as head of the U.S. group, pushed through a cease fire resolution to halt the African outbreak until further investigation could be made.
Dick Merritt, Jim Smith, and Jim Ivanoff played key parts in achieving SC’s successful representation of the ti.S. The students praised Prof. Eugene Harley, professor of political science, for his advisory and organizational aid.
Next year’s fourth* annual Model UN will be held at UCLA.
Prexy Race Shaken Up
DEVIL AND DANIEL SCREENS TONIGHT
“The Devil and Daniel Webster," an early American film classic, will be presented in 133 FH tonight at 8:30.
The film, a presentation of the spring Film Classics series, originally was released under the title “All That Money Can Buy.” It is based on a short story by Stephen Vincent Benet.
In the movie Walter Huston was cast as a devil in one of his most famous roles, while Daniel Webster was portrayed by Edward Arnold. Simone Simone appeared as the femme fatale, and James Craig played the part of a farmer.
The plot is centered around a
farmer who sells his soul to the devil in return for seven years of prosperity. At the end of seven years the farmer has become a very powerful and wealthy man, but at the same time he has become feared and disliked by all his old friends and even his wife.
When he refuses to give up his soul at the time agreett upon, he gets Daniel Webster to plead his case, while the devil assembles a rogues gallery of all time for a jury.
So elegant and powerful is Daniel Webster’s plea, however, that the devil loses the case, and the farmer retains his soul. *
Prom Bids Available To Senior Class Only
Senior week ticket holders may pick up their free bids to the senior prom at the ticket office starting today, and seniors without tickets may purchase bids for $3, according to Don Luizzi, publicity chairman.
Only a limited number of tickets are available for the May 16 semi-formal dance, Luizzi said. “Pick them up as soon as possible so we can get bids on sale to the rest of the student body.”
Tickets to lower classmen will not go on sale until May 1.
Music by Martin
The prom, sponsored by the junior class, will be held at the Riviera Country club. Music will be provided by Freddy Martin and his orchestra.
The queen and two attendants will be crowned at the prom, according to Larry Spector, senior class president. They will receive cups as prizes for their houses and personal favors for themselves.
Applications for queen are be-
ing distributed today to the sororities and women’s dormitories. Each group may choose one senior as their candidate. Applications, accompanied by an 8% by 11-inch glossy print photograph, must be turned in by 4 p.m. May 1 to 215 SU.
Three Eliminations
Candidates will be asked questions regarding their extra-curri-cular activities and their plans for the future at each of three elimination judgings.
The first elimination will be held at the Phi Kappa Psi house, May 4 at 6 p.m. Contestants will be required to wear suits. At the second judging on May 7 at the Delta Tau Delta house, date dresses will be worn. Formals will be worn at the final elimination at the Zeta Beta Tau house, 6 p.m. May 13.
Final judging will be made by male members of the Senior council, faculty, administration, and officers of the armed forces.
Chairman of the Senior Prom committee is Danny' McDonald.
Final Balloting For YW Posts Slated Today
Final balloting of the YWCA elections will be held today from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. at the Y, according to Vice-President Nancy Mispagel.
Candidates are Carla-Lee Conti and Ann Fant, president; Pat Crawford, vice-president; Carole Browne and Flo Ingram, secretary; and Mary Elizabeth Booth and Celia Cole, treasurer.
Miss Conti, a junior, has suggested that the YWCA be a center for both commuters and people living on campus, and be a place where students of all backgrounds could meet.
A fine arts major, Miss Conti has served the “Y” as publicity chairman this year. She is AWS cabinet activity coordinator, a member of Chimes, and a member of the Junior Class council.
Miss Fant, also a junior, has suggested expanding the “Y” leadership training program by holding discussion groups on student government, setting up personality development groups, creating a feeling of cabinet unity, extending the “Y” resident council for better publicity, and holding foreign student discussion groups.
Projects chairman of the “Y,” Miss Fant is “Y” Senate proxy, secretary of the junior clas^, member of the LAS council, and Chimes.
Four Seek Assembly
Candidates Top Office; Today
SIERRA HIKE
Club to Climb Trojan Peak
Plans for the first group-climb-ing of Trojan Peak by the Trojan Sierra club will be made at a luncheon Friday at noon in room D of Commons.
President Ralph Drummond is
calling the meeting to set a date for the trip and to enlist new members for the hike.
Preparations for the trip are being made early to avoid a cancellation due to any weather changes, Drummond said. A late start and cold weather forced the
Photographer
To Give Talk
Paul Wolfe, official photographer of the city of Burbank, will relate his experiences in seven years of photographing for t n e city of Burbank to the School of Journalism news photography class and other interested persons in 420 SU at 1:15 this afternoon.
Experiences of photographing persons involved in crime, suicide,
murders, fires, and other assignments as official photographer will
be discussed by Wolfe.
__f_________:_____________
SC’s political pot bubbles merrily today as four presidential candidates eye each other and hopefully look for a
place on the front burner.
ThereUl be additional fuel added to campaign fires today at noon in Bovard. Nominations for officers other than
those of ASSC president, vice-president, and secretary — which were handled yesterday — will be accepted.
Whistling up steam for the presidential race after yesterday’s campaign assembly are Jerry Carr, Warpen Clendenning, Arne Lindgren. and George Root.
Radmilla Gogo and Virginia Witmer were joined in the contest for vice-president by Mimi Shepherd. who was nominated from the floor.
Secretary Candidates Nancy Mispagel and Joanne Peterson will run for the secretaryship.
Root, member of Theta Xi fraternity and distance runner on the track squad, was nominated in a surprise move by the all-U party. S e n a t o r-a t-1 a r g e Bill Sweet, who was to have carried the all-U banner, dropped out because of a heavy scholastic schedule next fall.
Clendenning, a Kappa Sig, is presently junior class president.
Lindgren, a Sigma Chi, and sen-ator-at-large, is running under the Trojans for Representative Government label. Carr-is a Tau Kappa Epsilon and chairman of the Board of Publications. He was not present at the assembly.
Clendenning gave three necessary qualifications for president in his acceptance speech.
Qualifications Listed “A president should represent you, should have the knowledge to run the university in the best manner possible, and should be able to build an espirit de corps in the student body,” he said.
Lindgren summed up these qualifications for president:
“The objectives to put foremost are service and promotion of teamwork among the students.”
Root compared school office
JIM LUCOSTIC . . . elections head
with athletics in his acceptai a speech.
“One should approach the jci with a wholesome attitude and r sincere desire to serve,” he said.
Meanwhile, election worker under Commissioner Jim Lucos-tic have already begun preparations for the voting, which w*ill run Apr. 29, 30. and May 1. George Gonzales, chairman of the Elections Investigating committee, said that the election forms for candidates will be available tomorrow in the AMS office, 212
SU.
Finance Reports Due
Each candidate must submit an election financial report, and the forms, along with a list of campaign rules, will be put out tomorrow by the committee, according to Gonzales.
The committee will handle complaints and oversee the election and pre-election campaigning. The committee members are Ron Bartholomew, Joan Field. Shirley Merriam. Pat Wykoff, Jim McGregor, and Gonzales
Boom Ticket Sales for Errol Flynn Film
CHARGE! cry members of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, planning publicity for movie "Charge of the Light Brigade," which will be shown tomorrow at 3:15
tk
and 7:15 p.m. in 133 FH. Three ADS members that have helped publisize the event are, from left to right, Chairman Andy Anderson, Marvin Gottlieb, and Al Dieda.
The uniform worn by Errol Flynn in “Charge of the Light Brigade” is now being used in a promotion stunt by Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertisting fraternity.
Ticket Promotion
In an effort to boost ticket sales of “The Charge of the Light Brigade” to be shown in F o u n d ers hall tomorrow,
President A1 Dieda is parading around the Student Union in Flynn’s cavalry garb. Further stimulation of ticket sales is provided by phonograph music at the ticket booth in front of the Student Union.
Sales Boom
Sales really are booming, according to Bernie Grossman, ADS member who sold 50 tickets in two hours yesterday at the SC booth.
The film will be shown at 3:15 and 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in 133 FH. The 50-cent admission tickets can «be purchased at the Student Union booth between 8 a.m. and 3 p.m. today and tomorrow.
members to abandon their trip last year.
Trojan Peak, a 13,968 ft. crag in the High Sierras, is just north of Mt. Whitney and Lake Helen of Troy.
Drummond, Chester Versteeg, and Noble Trenham made the dedication climb, and have scaled the mountain the last two summers. The crag was officially named last year.
The portfolio, which contains pictures of the peak and information on its dimensions, will be exhibited at the meeting Friday.
The information is on file in Do-heny Memorial library.
Drummond requests all those wishing reservations for the
Red Registration Act May Prove Effective, Says Christol
Ext. 441.
Official
Notice
All students attending school under I-S and II-S student deferments should report to the registrar’s office, Owens hall (Robert DeVries), immediately, to fill out SS Form 109, which must be submitted to their local draft boards at the end of the current semester, June, 1953.
Albert F. Zeoh Counselor of Men + + * .
Students who expect to complete requirements for the bachelor’s degree in June of 1953 should check the list that is posted in the corridor outside the Registrar’s office in Owens hall.
Howard W. Patmore Registrar
by Bob Krauch
The beginnings of a fair and effective method for “smoking out the Communists” may be in the offing—but, testing its constitutionality could take as Jong as 12 to 15 more months.
This point was brought out by Dr. Carl Q. Christol, associate professor of political science, in an interview yesterday. He is an expert in constitutional law.
He discussed the ramifications of yesterday’s order by the Subversives Activities Control board requiring all members of the Com-luncheon to call PRospect 2311, j munist party to register with the
attorney general.
Penalty for failure to register is a $10,000 fine or five years imprisonment, or both.
“The order of the Subversives | Activities board most likely will be deemed constitutional,” said Dr. Christol, “but a test case, involving months of hearings, probably will develop.” *
Seeks Enslavement The board branded the Communist party as “a subsidiary and puppet of the Soviet Union” seeking enslavement of Americans.
They further stated the party is “using the cloak of the United States Constitution . . . and, strives for the 'establishment of a dictatorship of the Proletariat in the United States, a goal which would rob the American people of the. freedoms they have forged.”
“There are two methods in which this Communist registration order might be tested,” Dr. Christol said.
“Assuming the person asked to register i$ a proven Communist,
1
CARL CHRISTOL
. . . cites legal procedure
and he refuses to register,” Dr. Christol said, “he then has a right to appeal his case from the board’s decision to the U. S. Court of Appeals in Washington, D. C., within 60 days.
“A second possibility is for the person to be arrested,” Dr. Christol said. “In this case he could seek a writ of habeas corpus on one of two grounds:
“1—He may challenge the order’s constitutionality.
“2—He may admit the order is legal, but claim he is being held without proper cause, denying he is a Communist.
“His case would then be taken to the U. S. Circuit Court of Appeals,” Dr. Christol said.
“In either situation, if the or-
der for Communists to register is upheld,” Dr. Christol said, "the case can then be appealed to the U. S. Supreme Court.”
If the Supreme Court refuses the case, it will die and the lesser court’s decision will remain.
“If the Supreme Court accepts the case,” he said, “the final decision of this highest court could take many months.”
How Fought In explaining how it would be fought, Dr. Christol said:
“The Communists probably would fight the case relying heavily on sections in the First and Fifth amendments of the Constitution—Freedom of speech and expression, and the claim that the order deprives them of due process of law in unreasonably taking life, liberty, and property.
"The Federal government would base its case on the Constitutional powers found in Article 1— providing for the common defense and a broad interpretation of the war power.
“The final results of such a test case,” Dr. Christol says, “will be in favor of the government because of its need for strong internal security.”
The Subversives Activities Control Act of 1950, under which the board was created, also provides that the party submit annual financial statements to the attorney general.
Party members 'are forbidden to seek employment in the government. They cannot work in defense plants. They must identify all material sent through the mails and any radio or television broadcast the party sponsors.